2014: A botched year for the death penalty

What’s the biggest reason you have for not supporting the death penalty? The straight morality of using killing to show killing is wrong? The issues around innocence and the finality of the death penalty? Cost? Its misuse? The torture of the process itself?

2014 was, perhaps more than any I can remember recently, a year of gruesome examples of the flaws in the death penalty system.

Bloody justice in the USA

As European (and US) drugs usually used for lethal injection run out, US states have gone to nastier extremes to meet their addiction to capital punishment this year.

New, untested drug mixes have led to a year of botched executions that exposed the ‘humane’ method of execution by lethal injection as anything but. In Arizona, Joseph Wood was left gasping for air for nearly two hours before he died.

Guilty means possibly guilty

In the US alone - where reporting makes it easy to follow these things - seven death row inmates were found innocent of the crimes they were due to be executed for - the highest number in five years. They include Kwame Ajamu, Henry McCollum and Glenn Ford. The rhetoric around each of these is sadly nothing new - ‘the system failed’; ‘[police] jumped… to the easiest target’; ‘their convictions were based solely on the testimony of…’

This year also saw the University of Michigan release a study showing that 4% of death row inmates are innocent - a number that means innocent people have almost certainly been executed in the US. And sadly a number of states - Alabama, California, Florida and Missouri - are trying to speed up the execution process; a move which could mean more innocent people dying.

One sad example has just been confirmed by the US courts - a rare move in itself - a 14-year-old boy executed in a patently unfair trial. He would have been 84 now.

46 years waiting for freedom

The US isn’t the only ‘developed’ country using the death penalty - fellow G8 member Japan still executes despite the death penalty’s shortfalls.

Japan’s death row inmates are kept in the dark about their execution date until the morning they’re to be executed. Every single day might be their last. Death row prisoners are kept in isolation and rarely speak to anyone - a system that takes its toll: many prisoners suffer from severe mental health issues.

Now imagine having to ride that mental rollercoaster every day for 46 years. Whilst protesting your innocence. That was Hakamada Iwao’s life until March, when a court overturned his 1968 conviction at long last, giving him his freedom back at 78. We’d been campaigning for his release for years.

Death for resisting domestic and sexual violence

What classes as mitigating circumstances? Self-defence and other, horrifying circumstances should surely spare you from the death penalty, regardless of your thoughts on capital punishment . Not always. This was a year when the lack of compassion from some prosecutors and countries was made very public.

Sadly, we were not so lucky in helping Reyhaneh Jabbari in Iran, who killed a man she said was trying to sexually abuse her. Convicted after a deeply flawed trial, her execution went ahead despite international condemnation and thousands of Amnesty supporters taking action.

Losing your religion

And sadly murder isn’t the only crime where execution has become a state’s answer.

Even in the moments of good news - for Meriam, Li Yan and Hakamada Iwao, or for the seven exonerated in the US - the past 12 months have only highlighted the brutality of the death penalty. Not fair, consistent, humane, or foolproof in any way.

Unfortunately 2015 won’t see the end of state-sponsored executions but, as we did in 2014, we’ll continue to fight its use individual by individual, state by state, country by country. And we will, at some point, win.

About Amnesty UK Blogs Our blogs are written by Amnesty International staff, volunteers and other interested individuals, to encourage debate around human rights issues. They do not necessarily represent the views of Amnesty International.

Share

Tags

Whilst you’re here…

...like many not-for-profit organisations, our fundraising has been affected by COVID-19. Events are postponed, our book shops are closed and other fundraising activities have been halted in the interests of the health of our staff, volunteers and the public. Amnesty International UK depends on the generosity of our supporters to fund our ongoing fight for human rights. Our usual work must continue, and we must now also ensure governments around the world are doing enough to protect vulnerable people during this pandemic. Your donation, however big or small, is valuable.

If you are able to help, please chip in today and help the fight for humanity and human rights to continue.